If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

That happens to me sometimes (the headache, not the other), and most of the time I'm holding a fair bit of tension somewhere. When the pain gets too overpowering to "sit with" I do a quick "body scan" (a-la-Satipatthana), find which muscles I've got tensed up, and focus on relaxing them for a few seconds. That usually clears things up.

I get a lot of tension in my upper back... when I'm not sitting properly... or when I hold tension. I tend to hold my stress right there. So when I actually sit properly at the end of the day (I have been sitting after work lately), my body just aches. But like Saijun said, it goes away if I can just relax.

Even during Insta-Zazen, standing in the grocery line or sitting in the barbers' chair? Hmmm. Now that's strange.

Are you sitting on a Zafu? Are your knees flat on the ground, not hanging in the air?

I would try the old trick of mentally relaxing the tension in the muscles in various parts of the body for a few moments at the start of sitting, or when these symptoms appear. For example, feel the muscles in the jaw relax, the face, forehead, neck, shoulders, back. Then, return to Just Sitting.

In a nutshell: The core of Alexander Technique is the following: most pains unless they arise out of serious conditions ( that s why it is always a good idea to see your GP ) come from misuse. Trying to relax won t do and will induce further tensions. You need to apply directions and if nothing is medicaly wrong with you head to the closest Alexander Technique teacher.
Mark my words and I dont give a s.... About people mocking the Technique: many Zen practionners and priests are now discovering its precious message.

In addition to Chodo Cross, I have come across the names recently of several Soto Zen teachers who also teach or practice the Alexander Technique ... including Issho Fujita of the Sawaki-Uchiyama Line (who explains how it informs his Zen Practice here) ...

It's amazing sometimes to see how difficult it is to relax. Doctors face this problem all the time when they need to examine someone's reflexes or palpate their abdomen. The patient says he is completely relaxed but his arm or leg is still held up in the air... Those few who do know how to relax their bodies seem to do it by simultaneously calming their mind. I would say this relaxation/calming always includes letting go of control and never just a mental effort. The effort, trying to force relaxation through willpower, causes both body and mind to tighten up and contract. Instead, we need to give the body-mind space, lots of space, and not try to control it (Galen, look up the passage about the cows in ZMBM! ).

Gassho,
Pontus

In a spring outside time, flowers bloom on a withered tree;
you ride a jade elephant backwards, chasing the winged dragon-deer;
now as you hide far beyond innumerable peaks--
the white moon, a cool breeze, the dawn of a fortunate day

Even during Insta-Zazen, standing in the grocery line or sitting in the barbers' chair? Hmmm. Now that's strange.

Yup, I agree, strange!

Perhaps you have these pains at other times too, but distract yourself with activities so that you don't notice? Sometimes when I sit and all distractions disappear, I notice things that I hadn't been aware of before.

Pain in the forehead could have many causes. Perhaps you suffer from bruxism? Are your masseter muscles tender? That would explain both jaw pain and forehead pain. So would a dental infection or sinusitis. So would clenching the jaw and creasing your forehead because of too much tension. Don't worry if your jaw drops a little while sitting. You don't have to force your jaws shut. There is also no need to keep your gaze fixed at some imaginary distant mountains. Eye problems can also cause pain around the forehead. Just let go of your eyes and let them do whatever they wish. Don't force them.

Good luck!

/Pontus

In a spring outside time, flowers bloom on a withered tree;
you ride a jade elephant backwards, chasing the winged dragon-deer;
now as you hide far beyond innumerable peaks--
the white moon, a cool breeze, the dawn of a fortunate day